As3Crypto has been open-source from the start, but the development, iteration and feedback process isn’t quite as open and collaborative as it should be.

There is this one guy controlling every aspect of it, hiding his precious source code until he deems it ready for another release, and generally being way too slow at moderating blog comments, let alone answering emails or fixing bugs.
If this was a small pet project nobody used, that wouldn’t be so bad. But our little encryption framework is actually getting used in quite a few cool projects. So something has to improve here.
The controlling guy is going to stick around, but we’re not going to let him be a choke point anymore.

A couple years ago, I wrote this little Java Explorer script that used Liveconnect to inspect available Java classes. It included a little console that made it easy to play with those classes and their members to see what they seemed to do.

More recently, when the Flash Player 10 beta came out, I ended up wishing I could do the same thing: Browse through the APIs and try whatever new stuff was hiding there. So I’ve ported my original Java Explorer into a Flash Explorer.

Just like the original, it only works on Gecko-based browsers, although that could be fixed given a bit of effort.

As an aside, this includes an early version of a 2-way bridge between Flash and Javascript, which will totally kick ass when it’s done.

One final thought regarding ScreamingDonkey. As part of ScreamingDonkey, I’ve been trying pretty hard to make the browser DOM available to ESC-compiled scripts, but there’s actually some demand for fully isolated scripting containers. In a presentation last November, Douglas Crockford calls those containers “vat”, and thinks they can help provide secure mashups. Anyway, it would be pretty easy to take ESC, wrap it into a little “vat” mechanism and ponder the security value of the resulting product.

Here we go. ESC is far along enough to start treating it like a working ecmascript compiler. Combined with my little JSObject hack and some glue, you end up with something that gives you a taste of things to come.

So here is ScreamingDonkey. Not to be confused with ScreamingMonkey, a serious project done by the good folks at Mozilla. The names are similar, because the projects goals are similar, and they use some of the same underlying technologies: the tamarin VM and the ESC self-hosting compiler.
In both projects, the goal is to bring Ecmascript 4 scripting to a browser near you.

ScreamingMonkey relies on a locally installed ActiveX control packaging Tamarin and some browser glue. In contrast, ScreamingDonkey relies on a locally installed Flash Player that includes Tamarin and some browser glue.
More seriously, ScreamingMonkey is gluing Tamarin and the browser at a low level, bypassing sandbox or language limitations. Also, ScreamingMonkey’s version of Tamarin could be customized, and the compilation of scripts could be handled by a SpiderMonkey derivative, which would be likely to be faster than ESC.
ScreamingDonkey doesn’t have any of these luxuries. We do have the ESC self-hosting compiler, packaged to run within a flash movie. We also have a layer of glue that transparently exposes browser objects to the flash player. It gets us pretty close.

Interestingly, the evalui demo is a fun way to tweak ESC and see the results in real time: Edit one of the .es source files, paste the modified version in the input area and run it. The next compilation will start using the modifications you just made.
That’s a rather powerful demonstration of the self-hosting nature of ESC.

I’ve grabbed some recent .abc binaries from the Mozilla Tamarinrepository. The ESC project is moving along quite nicely apparently, as this version is able to compile a lot more constructs. For example, it has enough namespace support to let scripts access objects located in other packages (see the sample code on the “Eval UI” tab in the demo.)
I’ve tweaked the way those binaries get injected within the player, which fixes a few bugs (such as chunks of bytecode getting GC’d before they have a chance to run..woops.)

Anyway, give it a whirl. I’ve finally included the es4eval.swc file too. I’ve another little project that builds on this stuff that I’ll blog about soon.

My work life has been very distracting these past few months. I’m not quite out of the woods yet, but things should calm down a bit over the next few weeks, which should give me a chance to have some fun here again.

My apologies to folks reporting bugs or asking for advice. Your pleas are not lost on me, and I’ll make a point to fix the known bugs, and generally try to be a wee bit more helpful.

As much as it itches me, I’ll try hard not to start some new project yet, at least not until I feel better about the state of the existing stuff.

Anyway, here’s my tentative TODO list for now:

isSigned() chokes on a certificate served for www.openssl.org. That’s probably a clue my ASN-1 parsing sucks. I have an incomplete but potentially much better parsing method for ASN-1 (based on *gasp* actually reading a spec), so that might be the way to go there.

There’s something rotten in my BigInteger implementation, which seems to result in RSA key lengths being occasionally off.

Fix some TLS bugs (Andy’s parsing bugs, at least)

Implement some missing bits of TLS (to at least get https://api.del.icio.us/v1/tags/get to load.)

Check RSAKeyTest::testPem2(), since it might be broken.

Update the Eval library with a recent tamarin dump, and fix the newline problem in the test app.

Back in the days, Netscape created this neat layer of glue called LiveConnect. Among other things, it would expose javascript objects to Java through a JSObject class.
Fast forward to ActionScript. ExternalInterface provides a way of eventually doing the same thing. Things like FABridge make things somewhat friendlier, but FABridge only deals with accessing ActionScript goodies from JavaScript.

So here’s JSObject. Yes, same name. In fact, it behaves remarkably similarly like its Java counterpart: Get a handle to the browser window, and climb up the DOM from there. However, it distinguishes itself by its transparent syntax.
To the untrained eye, it looks like your javascript objects have been carried over inside the Flash player.
For example, you can do this with it:

Except for the typing of the function parameter and return value, there is no difference between this and browser javascript code.
Even neater, if you put a breakpoint inside that code, you can browse through JSObject instances and effectively walk your browser DOM through the flash debugger.
There’s a lame demo that uses the above example.. You should probably browse the source view, though.
At the risk of giving away the ending, this is done by coupling flash.utils.Proxy with ExternalInterface, with a fair amount of javascript glue on the browser side.
It has various performance limitations, but hopefully that can be minimized over time.

Also, I’ve added another compiler to the as3 eval() project. This one is just a straight linkage of the ESC abc files, as made available through the tamarin-central repository. It works, but it’s not particularly more interesting than the AS3 version, for now. However, as time goes by, and the ESC stuff improves, it will be a cheap way to see those improvements in a pretty web UI, without some codemonkey having to port the darn thing over and over again.

Well that’s it for now. Eval and JSObject.. I wonder where I’m going with this.

Over a year ago, Adobe open sourced Tamarin, and there was much rejoicing.
As part of the source drop, Adobe included an actionscript compiler written in actionscript.
A few folks noticed that it sounded a whole lot like an “eval()” method, and thought that once the good folks at Mozilla and Adobe hammered at it for a while, we’d get a fully working eval() function, that would be able to compile JavaScript, and AS3. And probably ES4 too.
Fast-forward to now. Tamarin has evolved quite a bit, and the self-hosting compiler is a lot closer to being done. However, much like a mogwai fed after midnight, it has mutated from its cute AS3 codebase to a somewhat more alien ES4 state.
On the plus side, it still targets a vanilla AVM2, so there aren’t new weird opcodes to worry about. Yet, anyway.

Long story short, I’ve ported that stuff into an as3 library. It’s not done, and won’t be done until the es4 self-compiler itself is done.
It works though, whenever it doesn’t crash. You can try it here.
It has a lot of potential too. Let me count the ways:

Dynamically compiled code within the flash player. eval() is possibly the most misused command in JS, but you can do some really neat stuff with it. Plus, the flash VM lets you segregate code rather well, so you can eval() code without chancing a clobber of your existing code. With a bit more investigation, it might even be possible to run untrusted code safely. Maybe.

Letting web apps accelerate themselves by eval()-ing themselves in the flash VM. It’d require proxying the browser DOM through ExternalInterface and the Proxy class, which might negate some of the speed benefits. Still, it could probably beat up every other implementation on a SunSpider benchmark, and take their lunch money too.

A poor man’s ScreamingMonkey. If esc ever gets to support the full set of ES4 proposals, then every non-ES4 browser out there that already has Flash could suddenly run ES4. That’s a nifty thought right there.

Anyway, that’s a way off. For now, I’ll try and backport esc updates on a semi-regular basis.

If you missed it, an Adobe engineer, Scott Petersen, gave a talk at Chicago Max a couple of months ago, showcasing some crazy side project of his, that allows him to run c/c++ code on top of an unmodified Flash player.

This has various implications, one of which is one could someday interface their as3 code directly with a library like openSSL.

Anyway, it’s neat, and so I’m kinda starting on a quest to figure out how it’s done. So far, I can see 2 big chunks to this:

put together an actionscript runtime that lets C code feel at home. That includes reconciling the asynchronousness of as3 with the synchronousness of a C program. Also things like arbitrary pointer arithmetic would need to be handled.

Beside this crazy but fun exploration, I’m also reading some specs on ASN.1 and such, so it’s possible as3crypto might sprout a ASN.1 parser that doesn’t suck.
Part of the fun here is mapping the ASN.1 type notation to something very similar-looking, yet valid as AS3 code. The other part is having a DER parser that doesn’t think typing is optional or fuzzy.

Apparently, ActionScript 2 isn’t dead yet.
While I anxiously await the day popular gizmos like the Wii or the iPhone get to run as3 bytecode, there are apparently still legitimate reasons to want to code with As2.
There already are various chunks of code out there to encrypt stuff with As2, the most popular being probably still Meychi’s Ascript library in spite of its site being down, but there is nothing to do public key encryption with As2.

Nothing, that is, until Marcos Boyington over at Yuniti ported the RSA logic to AS2.

Now technically, the RSA stuff in As3Crypto was directly lifted from JSBN , therefore porting it to AS2 is pretty much equivalent to porting JSBN straight to AS2.
Still, Marcos was nice enough to give my library some props.
Anyway, go check out his As2 RSA library if ActionScript 2 is your thing.

In spite of my previous post, I didn’t feel right releasing something that didn’t have a shot at protecting against Man-in-the-middle attacks, so I took a few more days to implement some X.509 certificate parsing and validating.
This release ships with a number of well-known Certificate Authorities, so you should be able to use the lib to connect to public TLS-enabled services easily.

The easiest way to get started is with TLSSocket. Check out TLSTest.as for some sample code using it.

So where do we go from here? Well, that’s a whole lot of new code, so expect a release or two dedicated to stabilizing the code base. I’m also falling behind on my test coverage, and I don’t even have a demo UI to showcase TLS.

That should keep me busy for a little while.

By the way, if you guys are using this library in some public project, please write a quick comment with a URL to your project.
I’d like to keep a list of projects somewhere on the site.